In addition to its role as a staple and everyday activity of women, spinning has acquired some specific meanings which have been depicted in paintings. In this second and final article, I will look at some of these.

The Spinster

In a number of paintings, spinning is shown as an appropriate activity for a young woman to be engaged in when being visited by a suitor or potential husband. Perhaps it was the idea that she would be too busy with her work to be tempted to get near to the man, let alone embrace him. It also conveyed the impression of the woman’s industriousness and devotion to such homely activities.

In Bouguereau’s The Proposal from 1872, even elaborate wrought iron fencing isn’t going to keep the couple apart. The artist shows another common attribute of such courtship scenes: a large cat at the woman’s feet.

In Thomas Eakins’ The Courtship from about 1878, the woman is so busy spinning that she seems almost oblivious of her young man sitting at a distance and watching.

Of course the woman who keeps spinning and never marries then becomes a spinster, the origin of the English word. It started when the term was appended to a woman’s name to indicate her occupation, and by 1719 became synonymous with an old maid.

The Fates and thread of life

In classical Greek and Roman mythology, the lives of humans are determined by the thread spun for them by the Moirai (Greek) or Fatae (Roman). Because of their importance, the Romans also came to refer to them euphemistically as the Parcae (the sparing ones). The three were further identified as:

Clotho (or Nona), the spinner, who holds the distaff and spindle, and spins the thread of life;

Lachesis (or Decima), the allotter, who measures the thread allotted to each person using her measuring rod;

Atropos (or Morta), the unturnable, who cuts the thread for each person, choosing the time and manner of their death.

Il Sodoma’s classical depiction of The Three Fates from about 1525 shows, from the left, Lachesis, Atropos wielding her shears, and Clotho with her distaff and spindle. They appear in many other paintings even into much more recent times.

Walter Crane’s ingenious Bridge of Life from 1884 uses a continuous white thread of life as the thread of time. The baby born and breastfed in the left foreground passes through life, past Clotho who is spinning the thread of life and time at the upper right. That thread passes over the bridge, and Atropos cuts it on their death, in the right foreground.

Spinning as a womanly pursuit: the feminisation of Hercules

A more bizarre classical reference to spinning is in the enforced feminisation of Hercules (Heracles) by Omphale. As a swashbuckling hero, Hercules would be the last man you’d expect to learn how to spin, but when he has to work for Omphale in her court to pay penance for his murder of Iphitus, that is exactly what he does.

In the middle of this marvellous mosaic from about 250 CE, Hercules is seen holding his distaff and spindle, dressed as a woman, while Omphale sits on his Nemean lionskin on her throne, clutching his club.

This is the weird theme of Lucas Cranach the Elder’s painting Hercules and Omphale from 1537. As a paragon of manly attainment – in his twelve labours most notably – Hercules is now dressed as a woman, and performing the womanly task of spinning.

Painted originally for Don Pedro de Arce, huntsman to King Philip IV, Velázquez’s Las Hilanderas or The Spinners became part of the Royal Collection, where it is believed to have been damaged by fire in 1734. When it was repaired, new sections were added to the left, right, and upper edges. Until 1928, it was believed to depict the tapestry workshop of Santa Isabel, with spinners working in the foreground, and tapestries hanging in the background.

Since then, it has been claimed to show the weaving contest between Arachne and Athena, although careful examination of the painting reveals that no weaving takes place within the image. However, the women in the foreground show the traditional crafts involved in the production of wool yarn, as seen in the detail below.

4Comments

What a very nice essay about spinning! I did some years ago a little video “Spinning women in paintings” https://youtu.be/7-xoFhQsuD0 . If you are able to read German or have a good translator I can recommend the essay “Die spinnende Göttin – Die Spindel als Werkzeug und Symbol in Geschichte, Mythologie und Märchen” by Ulrike Pohl – link is given at the video description.

Thank you for posting that link to your video: I strongly recommend it (and tweeted such) for a beautiful and moving display of paintings of women spinning, accompanied by superb Irish harp music.
Where did you get that music? It is as wonderful as the paintings.
Howard.

Thank you for your kind words! Never thought to meet someone who might be also interested in the topic spinning and paintings. 🙂 I often look for free music at archive.org – at the description of the video you can find the link to the music at archive.org …. there are some more pieces of this sort offered there. Best wishes from Germany – Mani